http://www.interaksyon.com/article/121125/eco-friendly-flying--electric-planes-aim-to-soar-high-for-cleaner-aviation
ECO-FRIENDLY FLYING | Electric planes aim to soar high for cleaner aviation
December 7, 2015  Djallal Malti and Bojan Kavcic, Agence France-Presse

[image  
http://www.interaksyon.com/assets/images/articles/original_1449372828.jpg
Electric plane. PHOTO FROM AIRBUS GROUP
]

AJDOVSCINA, Slovenia - Ultra-light, fast, and cheap. More than a century
after the Wright brothers flew the world's first powered aircraft, a small
Slovenian company now hopes to revolutionize the aviation industry with its
award-winning electric planes.

Pipistrel's pioneering Taurus Electro is seen as a breath of fresh air in a
sector responsible for 13 percent of CO2 emissions from all transport
sources.

Launched in 2007, around 20 orders are now put in every year for the
two-seater plane, which is produced in a factory in the town of Ajdovscina,
close to the Italian border. 

The 110,000-euro ($120,770) price tag is offset by the plane's inexpensive
maintenance: at 70 cents an hour, the Taurus is 10 times cheaper to run than
traditional twin-seater planes, according to Pipistrel.

Simplicity is key: you charge the battery, hop inside the cockpit, and hit
the "on" button to activate the fuselage's propeller. 

The large-winged aircraft can thrust itself to an altitude of 2,000 meters
(6,500 feet), after which the engine is retracted and the Taurus glides
across the sky as a sailplane.

"You have just two buttons, up and down and full power, but you can always
switch off immediately when you need to slow down the aircraft," explained
pilot Nejc Faganelj, soaring high above the Slovenian countryside on a sunny
winter's day.

But behind the deceptively easy usage lies a highly complex design. The most
crucial element -- and biggest challenge -- is the lithium battery, which
needs to be light yet sturdy so that it doesn't catch fire if it overheats.

"To copy a design from the car industry is not that difficult. But to make
something that is lighter, more efficient -- that is definitely something
that has not been done before," said Pipistrel engineer Jure Tomaciz.

Secret night flights

Now Pipistrel has even loftier ambitions: to sell the world's first electric
four-seater plane. 

Its Taurus G4 prototype -- built by combining two twin-seaters -- won NASA's
prestigious Green Flight award in 2011, worth $1.35 million.

The plane covered 650 kilometers (400 miles) in the space of two hours with
an average speed of 172 kilometers per hour. 

"The car industry, with all the money it has at its disposal, and
practically no weight limitation, even today isn't capable of producing an
electric car that would take four passengers for 600 kilometers at a speed
of 200 kilometers per hour," Pipistrel's founder, Ivo Boscarol told AFP.

"We did that with our electric plane," he added proudly.

The son of a machine engineer turned test pilot, Boscarol has spent the last
three decades developing and perfecting his low-carbon invention. 

When he built his first aircraft in the 1980s, he had to test-fly them in
secret and only after dark -- at the time piloting private planes was
prohibited in Slovenia, then part of the former communist Yugoslavia.

The night flights, along with the aero-dynamic shape of the plane wings,
inspired Boscarol to name his company after the pipistrelle bat.

Today, the Slovenian firm is a global market leader in the field of
energy-efficient aviation travel, with Boscarol featuring on the 2015 list
of news outlet Politico's most influential Europeans.

"I’m sure the electric flight will become a standard. This aircraft will be
able to cross the Atlantic, to fly faster, to carry more persons," he said
confidently. 

Hybrid is the future

However, large aircraft companies remain cautious, saying there's still a
long way to go before the technology can be used for heavy passenger planes.

"I don't think we'll see an entirely electric plane for another 50 years,"
said Philippe Petitcolin whose Safran company supplies engines to Airbus
planes.

Nevertheless, "in 20 or 30 years, we may be able to fly regional commuter
jets with around 60 people onboard thanks to hybrid electric propulsion,"
according to Airbus Group boss Tom Enders.

The corporate giant currently explores this vein with its E-Fan, a
twin-seater plane powered by two 30-kilowatt electric motors.

The ultra-light aircraft aims to offer aero clubs an alternative to
traditional planes, both noisier and more polluting.

But, there's still a lot of room for improvement: the E-Fan currently only
has a one-hour flight range.

Last summer it however managed to cross the English Channel, 106 years after
Frenchman Louis Bleriot became the first person to make the journey in a
heavier-than-air plane.

The E-Fan's exploit shows what can be possible with "a future aviation based
on more electric technologies," according to Airbus.
[© interaksyon.com]




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